How could SEC priorities shift for investment managers post-election?

How could SEC priorities shift for investment managers post-election?
Regulation experts warn day-to-day operations could be impacted.
NOV 07, 2024

Donald Trump’s return to the White House is set to lead to changes in the way investment managers are regulated, but what could that look like?

With Wall Street firms including Goldman Sachs and Citi seeing their stock surge after Wednesday’s election result, experts including former senior regulators, chief compliance officers, LPs, and lawyers have given their reading of the potential shift in priorities for the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Firstly, advisory firm Iron Road Partners’ analytical note to clients highlights that “the upcoming change in administration will impact the regulatory landscape for investment managers, likely shifting focus areas and marking a new phase in the regulatory cycle” while noting that there will no clear steer on this until a new SEC chair is appointed – which it says could be as far as nine months away.

However, the team’s analysis is that there will be “a shift toward a more deregulatory SEC stance, which could introduce future risks for investment managers who may grow too comfortable or become complacent with short term compliance efforts.”

The reality is also expected to be mixed with some areas of investment manager operations more likely to face tighter regulations while others are relaxed.

Specifically on enforcement, Iron Road Partners says issues that mostly affect institutional investors and which are technical violations that do not result in investor harm may be reduced in importance while those impacting retail investors, especially where there is clear investor harm, will be deemed of greater importance.

Registered investment companies, marketing rule cases, and Reg BI could all gain greater importance, while crypto cases may face a lighter touch unless there is fraud.

Much of this priority shift could carry over to examinations.

The firm also sees potential changes to rulemaking with a focus on deregulation and simplification such as more practical guidance related to the Marketing Rule – which advisors have said is currently hard to navigate -  and rules easing retail investors’ access to private funds and other complex financial products.

MUSK FACTOR

Meanwhile, the Securities and Capital Markets attorneys at New York law firm Harter Secrest & Emery also expect there to be some significant changes ahead.

This could include intervention by Elon Musk, who they note “has been subject of SEC enforcement actions in the past and has great disdain for the SEC.”

If, as has been suggested, the uber-rich businessman takes a role in the Trump administration, potentially looking at government efficiency, the law firm team believes that “it is possible that he would try to gut the SEC or at the very least gut its enforcement mechanisms.”

Aside from Musk, the team will be watching to see if SEC rules face new legal challenges and that “the SEC is unlikely to defend the more controversial rules subject to current court challenges – namely the climate disclosure rule that has been at the heart of numerous challenges since being adopted by the SEC in the spring.”

Latest News

Advisors handicap the brewing battle between Trump and Powell
Advisors handicap the brewing battle between Trump and Powell

It's a showdown for the ages as wealth managers assess its impact on client portfolios.

Savvy Wealth wooes Commonwealth advisors with Fidelity advantage
Savvy Wealth wooes Commonwealth advisors with Fidelity advantage

CEO Ritik Malhotra is leveraging Savvy Wealth's Fidelity partnership in offers to Commonwealth advisors, alongside “Acquisition Relief Boxes” filled with cookies, brownies, and aspirin.

Elder fraud complaints surge past $4.8 billion as investment scams lead losses
Elder fraud complaints surge past $4.8 billion as investment scams lead losses

Fraud losses among Americans 60 and older surged 43 percent in 2024, led by investment schemes involving crypto and social manipulation.

Apollo ramps up retail push with 'New Markets' division
Apollo ramps up retail push with 'New Markets' division

The alternatives giant's new unit, led by a 17-year veteran, will tap into four areas worth an estimated $60 trillion.

Commonwealth advisors, employees, let it all hang out on Reddit
Commonwealth advisors, employees, let it all hang out on Reddit

"It's like a soap opera," says one senior industry executive.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.